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  • Azerbaijan offers to sell gas to Europe

    Azerbaijan offers to sell gas to Europe
    By Stefan Wagstyl, East Europe Editor, in Baku

    FT
    May 27 2006 03:00


    Azerbaijan has offered to help Europe meet its long-term energy needs
    and reduce its dependence on Russia by putting itself forward as a
    potential source of natural gas.

    Ilham Aliyev, president of the energy-rich Caspian nation, told the FT
    Azerbaijan was ready to focus on mainland Europe as a potential future
    market when planning new gas projects.

    "Until last year we considered Turkey and Georgia as the only markets
    for Azerbaijan's gas," said Mr Aliyev. "The situation has changed
    now. We see that demand from Europe for additional gas becomes more
    viable and we need to evaluate that.

    "For us this is a new situation . . . But if there's demand from
    Europe we will consider it. To do that we need to review our
    production and investment programme."

    Mr Aliyev's offer comes amid widespread concern in the European Union
    about energy security and calls for diversification. The search for
    alternative gas sources has intensified since the contract dispute
    between Russia and Ukraine last winter prompted a brief break in
    supplies to some EU states.

    Mr Aliyev said new gas developments would take time. Oil industry
    executives in Baku agree, saying the country's first big new gas
    project was just nearing completion - the Shah Deniz offshore field
    and the associated South Caucasus Pipeline (SCP) to Georgia and
    Turkey.

    Big potential new gas sources - if proved viable - would probably not
    come on stream before 2015 - following the planned development of a
    second stage of Shah Deniz.

    Other potential sources - notably pipelines under the Caspian bringing
    gas from Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan - could take similarly long to
    develop.

    Mr Aliyev said Azerbaijan was ready to play a transit role for both
    gas and oil. His confidence stems from the near completion of two big
    pipelines - the SCP, which will start transporting gas in the autumn,
    and the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline from Azerbaijan to
    Turkey's Mediterranean coast, which is due to ship its first oil
    soon. Mr Aliyev says proudly: "The pipelines are the biggest energy
    projects in the world . . . This unique infrastructure integrates the
    Caspian and the Mediterranean."

    Mr Aliyev ran Socar, the Azerbaijan state oil company, before
    succeeding his late father, Heydar, as president. Heydar Aliyev, a KGB
    boss and Communist party official in Soviet times, established an
    authoritarian government that he controlled until his death in
    2003. Ilham Aliyev took power in presidential elections that
    international observers condemned as flawed.

    The government ran into more criticism last year when the ruling party
    won parliamentary elections by a landslide amid complaints of fraud
    and harassment from opposition parties.

    Mr Aliyev rejects suggestions his country is undemocratic and accuses
    the foreign media of painting a false picture.

    "I don't say we have a perfect society," he said. "Of course not. It
    is not possible for a country to have the same level of democracy as
    you have in western Europe. It's not possible in 15 years . . . But
    we have many achievements."

    Mr Aliyev argues rapid economic development - fuelled by energy export
    revenues - will lead to a strong democracy.

    Opposition politicians and human rights activists say this may not
    happen if the wealthy business people around the president monopolise
    money and power, as has happened in other energy-rich states. They
    want the US and the EU to increase pressure on Mr Aliyev for
    democratic reforms.

    But Mr Aliyev thinks western leaders worried about oil and gas
    supplies will be unwilling to destabilise Azerbaijan at a time of
    rising tensions between the west and neighbouring Iran, which is home
    to more than 20m ethnic Azeris.

    There is also concern about Azerbaijan's long-running dispute with
    Armenia over the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.
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